And if the patient can't pay?
Then they should have had insurance. Or like the USA. Just fix them up so they can walk off out.
And if the patient can't pay?
That's an extra grand and a half a year. No thanks.
Edit: When they say 3p rise, is that 3p in the pound, or just a flat 3p on a tax bill?
A lot of money drained out from the NHS is by these damn agencies charging eye watering amounts for staff.
Also, what really annoyed me was listening to the Nurses etc moaning about the lack of money in their departments and under staffing, then themselves finishing their contracts, signing up to the agencies then immediately working in the same dept for 3x the pay as an agency worker
They weren't moaning then, in fact I would more use the term gloating, and they couldn't see how damn hypocritical it was when I was pointing that out to them.
I disagree.
People should be given the option of leaving the NHS. Those that opt out pay no NI. That way people who have private healthcare don't pay for something they aren't using.
That's an extra grand and a half a year. No thanks.
Edit: When they say 3p rise, is that 3p in the pound, or just a flat 3p on a tax bill?
A while ago in the hospital my partner works at, they slashed middle management as there were managers managing managers...
Recently there have been talks of a re-structure, a new layer of managers sat between the admin and the main managers. This is the brain child of one of the consultants whos wife (surprise surprise) is a prime candidate for one of these new positions..Jobs for the boys!
Much as some of you want to blame immigrants for the NHS problems frankly young fit people from abroad are a net positive not a negative for the NHS or at least short term to mid term (50 years or so)
The NHS spends less on management and administration than internationally comparable health systems and far, far less than private healthcare.
Why are people so quick to presume that management and administration isn't needed? The NHS is a huge organisation, it needs management.
I think the band ought to be set higher, £1500 or £2000.
Worst I earn over 100k a year post ever?
Don't forget the tax free allowance though. To pay £1k extra, you'd be earning approximately £43k, £1.5k is £60k, 2k is £76k. Setting it too high wouldn't result in many answering it at all. The bar should be a 'I earn above average and do/don't mind paying extra'.
The NHS is a bottomless pit that could absorb almost any amount of extra money thrown at it.
People live longer and not necessarily healthier in fact there seems to be quite a bit of evidence that although we live longer quality of life in later years is not improving much.
As we get older many of us will get horrible diseases that are really are just natures way of thinning out the population, how much do we spend treating these diseases and spend on drugs to sustain poor quality of life.
Yeah, I know, but that's the point, isn't it?
OP said that well-paid professionals would vote with their feet and leave.
Should set the bar at "well-paid professionals", something 95% bracket (£68k+ according to HMRC)
My view exactly. Amount of money we spend treating people who are terminally ill just to increase their life (normally poor quality) by a little bit. Surely it can be better utilised?
Something I touched on a few posts back.
By letting them suffer?
I don't work for the office of national statistics sorry. I would be in favour of an insurance type system, similar to what my mother does in Australia. She even has to pay for an ambulance on her insurance!
By letting them suffer?
Very short sighted outlook though - a well functioning and robust NHS helps to make the society we live in a better place to be - wouldn't you (in general) want to be contributing towards that end?